Re: Question for ex-smokers
- From: RaeMorrill <RaeMorrill@xxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 24 Apr 2005 17:46:34 GMT
I can't help but believe the experience is going to be different for everyone. Everyone has different levels of addiction, some more severe (whether physical or psychological). I smoked 2 packs a day for a number of years, and I do not recall any physical cravings at all. I likely have an addictive personality, but it isn't physical but psychological.
Su wrote:
My experience and observation supports the opposite. For me, the withdrawl itself lasted from 48 hours to a full week, depending upon which time I quit (1st, 2nd, or 3rd). It didn't matter if I first woke up in the morning or I was watching a hilarious movie. I went through the withdrawal.
I presume you're an ex-smoker. If so, how much did you smoke on an average day?
"Ed Chait" <edchait4remove@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:yHLae.66$Oz2.9@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
"Su" <.@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:wrKae.96776$f%4.67724@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
"haggis" <haggis58@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:426B148E.6000503@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Anne Vasquez wrote:
I don't know why I'm answering this thread, because I never smoked (seriously allergic to it, so I thank you for quitting), but I seem to recall reading that the actual craving only lasts about 2-1/2 minutes.
Sure it does.
Actually, my experience and observation supports that.
The key thing is distracting yourself with some activity that takes your mind off the craving.
If you continue to entertain the same thoughts, of course the craving will not go away, and there is a very good chance that you will use whatever substance you are addicted to that will make the craving go away.
One of the biggest lies that our minds try to feed us when we are addicted is that the craving will not go away until we use, smoke, snort, slam, etc.
That's simply not true. The craving will go away quite quickly if we just stop entertaining those thoughts and get busy with something else.
The physical and psychological components of addiction are fairly complex, and once the pure physical addiction is overcome, then we often deal with continuing depression, insomnia, and anxiety. It takes time for the brain to again begin to produce the chemicals that make us feel at ease, since it has not had to do so for usually quite a while.
ed
.
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